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The Foibles Of Martha Affect Real People

* Bumped up *

Many of you may know that I spent a few years in the Boston area. And no, this isn’t about baseball, though I can say – it is hard being a Fan of the Pinstripes in Red Sox Nation. Clearly, though, I survived.

No, this is about some of the legal cases that have Martha Coakley’s name on them. Recently, Bronwyn’s Harbor made mention of one case, the Fells Acres Case, with which I am very familiar. Why? Because I knew Cheryl LaFave and her mother, Violet Amirault. They, along with their brother, were falsely accused of child abuse at the daycare center they ran. They are now all out of prison. John Stossel did an investigative report for ABC News on the Fells Acres case, and the imprisonment of the Amirault family (h/t to Brownyn’s Harbor):



Three lives were destroyed by false allegations – three. People, GOOD people, who never deserved the horrible stigma that became attached to them. And Martha Coakley was hellbent on keeping Gerald Amirault in prison, even after the glaring lack of evidence, and the glaring coercion of testimony from the children.

There was another big case with which Coakley was connected (h/t to Nazareth Priest for this article). That was the “Pedophile Priest” case,t he second in a three-part series of “Martha’s Greatest Hits: The Things The Democrats Would Like You To Forget About Martha Coakley.” Click HERE for Part Three.

Back to the case at hand. This one is a doozy:

The “Pedophile Priest” Case, 1995-2002: Coakley cut secret deal in 1995 that allowed Father Geoghan to molest again.

Martha Coakley is running for the U.S. Senate in part on her track record of keeping children safe from predators. The actual facts, however, are somewhat at odds with her campaign biography.

One of the most notorious cases of homosexual child abuse in the “pedophile priests” scandal that rocked the American Catholic Church in general and the Archdiocese of Boston in particular over the past twenty years involved Father John Geoghan, who came to symbolize the cancer in the church.

Here’s a brief introduction to the late, defrocked Father Geoghan by Denise Noe in Crime Magazine. Be sure to read the whole story, then come back.

The unofficial poster boy for priest pedophilia was a Boston priest named Father John Geoghan. He became a symbol for everything the church had done wrong in handling this problem when, on Jan. 6, 2002, The Boston Globe broke the story about how Boston’s archbishop, Cardinal Bernard Law, had moved the abusive Geoghan from parish to parish over the years. The article also discussed the $10 million dollar settlement the church had already made with families of his victims. After the article ran, an embarrassed Law apologized – and turned over to law enforcement the names of dozens of Boston priests who had been similarly accused.

The Geoghan scandal rocked Boston, and eventually resulted in Cardinal Law’s removal as Archbishop. In part to shield him from possible prosecution, the late Pope John Paul II summoned Law to Rome, where he was ensconced as the Archpriest of the historic Basilica of St. Mary Major, and replaced him in Boston with Archbishop Sean O’Malley.

And what was Ms. Coakley’s role in all this? At first, she was applauded for her role in the successful prosecution of Father Geoghan in 2002. But then it was discovered that she had plea-bargained away molestation charges against him in 1995, letting him off with probation in a deal that was kept secret from the public.

What?

One possible explanation for her actions is that she had lost a high-profile case against a priest in suburban Woburn, Father Paul Manning; Manning’s parishioners reportedly cheered when he was acquitted of molesting an 11-year-old altar boy at his 1994 trial.

Still, as David Clohessy, national director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, noted at the time: “Charging Geoghan with something and exposing him publicly might well have brought forward victims, witnesses, whistle-blowers, and evidence that could have resulted in a conviction and a tougher sentence.’’

Sigh. I don’t even know what to say about this. But here is what Martha Coakley has to say in defending this decision:

Wow. I am no attorney, but I have worked with and for attorneys. I cannot imagine them not pursuing every lead they could in a case. I cannot imagine them pushing to get the records from the Roman Catholic Diocese, even if they were freakin’ deacons in the church. Holy smokes.

The article continues:

And here’s the Boston Globe story, recounting the whole sordid mess:

When Martha Coakley was the Middlesex district attorney, her office prosecuted the Rev. John J. Geoghan based on an allegation that he squeezed the buttocks of a 10-year-old boy a single time at a public swimming pool. The highly publicized 2002 conviction won Coakley widespread praise for bringing the first successful criminal case against the widely accused pedophile, a priest many had called “Father Jack.’’

But seven years earlier, Coakley, then the head of the Middlesex child abuse unit, had Geoghan in her sights and took a dramatically different approach. Back then, three grade-school brothers told investigators that Geoghan had inappropriately touched them during numerous visits to their Waltham home, and had made lewd telephone calls to them. Rather than prosecute, Coakley agreed to grant Geoghan a year of probation in a closed-door proceeding that received no media attention at all.

Because of the deal, Geoghan faced no formal charges and no criminal record.

In sanctioning the 1995 probation agreement, Coakley, now the front-runner in a special election for the United States Senate, never pressed the Boston Archdiocese for any prior complaints against Geoghan.

That’s one way to make a name for yourself: let a pedophile off the hook privately so that he can molest more children, and then make a big, public conviction to take credit for your amazing work keeping children safe from……the pedophile priest you secretly let go seven years earlier.

And as for Father Geoghan, he was strangled and killed by a fellow inmate in February, 2004.

That is quite a sordid tale indeed. I encourage you to read the other two parts of this series (I’ll give you a hint about Part Three – it has to do with unreported assets). It is eye opening.

Now, I know some people are surprised I am not supporting the woman in this case (though since I live in SC, I don’t exactly have a vote – oh wait, maybe if I worked for ACORN I could…Ahem.). And I did like Coakley when I first heard about her. I was excited at the prospect of a woman taking over Teddy’s seat, an irony considering his way with women. But, as Scott Brown has reminded us, it isn’t Teddy’s Seat:

As I have stated all along, it is the RECORD of the candidates that needs to be considered. The decisions Coakley made as Attorney General are indicative of the decisions she will make as a US Senator, and those DO affect all of us. This is exactly for what I was calling during the 2008 Primary Season – look at the records of the candidates, and vote for the one who stands above.

That means, when the Massachusetts Democrats send out a four page mailer with the claim that Scott Brown wants to turn away ALL rape victims from hospitals, they sure as hell better be able to back that up with his RECORD. This is to what they are referring:

Brown is a state senator, and in 2005 he filed an amendment that would have allowed workers at religious hospitals or with firmly held religious beliefs to avoid giving emergency contraception to rape victims. The amendment failed, and Brown voted in favor of a bill allowing the contraception. He also voted to override a veto issued by his fellow Republican, then-Gov. Mitt Romney.

This is casting aspersions plain and simple. Stick to the facts, stick to the records, let the people decide based on that. Don’t take (yet another)page out of the Obama playbook a la the “Harry and Louise” ads. If the party believes she is the best candidate, they shouldn’t have to resort to flat-out lies about her opponent’s record.

So we need more women in Congress? Hells yeah. But that doesn’t mean we should want any woman, regardless of her record or the (stupid) things she says. In this particular case, Scott Brown appears to be the better candidate. He is pro-choice, a lieutenant colonel (30 years) in the National Guard JAG Corps, and supports civil unions for LGB people, like (too) many Democrats. As far as I can tell, Brown knows Curt Schilling is NOT a Yankees fan, so there’s that…

The people will decide who will fill the people’s seat. Until then, it is sure to be an interesting ride.

  • jbjd

    Whoa!  Powerful, R3A.  Between your posts and mine on the subject, I think it fair to say, we have thoroughly de-bunked any claim from MC to the high road when it comes to protecting children.

  • Jackarooty

    Amy, thank you so much for detailing Martha’s history.  Like you I was very much in support of her.  After she was elected AG I always thought that she would go very far in her political career.  For years I looked at her as the first female governor of MA.  She turned out to be a great disappointment.  The local media really isn’t going near the real story of Martha’s career.  I suppose at this point they don’t need to do much because things look very good for Scott.  I couldn’t vote for a pair of “breasts” as much I believe Congress is in need of smart, capable and strong women…just not this woman.
    Barry made a very condescending and elitist comment at Martha’s rally today about Scott’s “truck”.  I do hope that Scott’s campaign can get an ad up by tomorrow referencing it.
    Thanks again Amy for great investigative journalism. :-D

  • trinity

    We certainly do need more women in Congress, but electing women just because they are women is very wrong thinking.  I think the people of Massachusettes are looking for better representation and someone who won’t be dismissive of what is really going on there and out here in the real world.

  • HARP

    Bye Bye Martha

  • arabella trefoil

    Anyone who has lived in MA realizes that voterbase is complex. Obama’s people are misreading this situation badly. Wedge isssues in MA? Don’t work.

    Many Catholics in MA were hurt by the Geoghan case in ways that a non-Catholic, non-ethnic person can’t fathom.

    And by the way, the Bay Staters have a lot of common sense. They know when somebody is trying to push their buttons. (Remember who won the Dem primary in MA.)

    Thanks for bringing these cases up, Amy. I am no longer a single issue voter. The Dems have used scare tactics on women for too long.

    I appreciate it that people have different points of view here on NQ. But we are living in a new era of bare-knuckle politics. No longer will I vote for the lesser of two evils. I vote strategically. The Dems. Obama in particular must be punished. Brown must win this one. It will seriously derail Obama.

    If we have to rebuild the existing parties election by election, so be it.

    I voted for Republicans for the first time ever in the presidential election. Didn’t hurt me a bit.

    We may disagree passionately on NQ, but I hope no voice is ever silenced.

  • confused American

    I just love it when the media says that a GOP will take over the Democrat’s Mass seat.  Its not the Democrat’s seat its the people’s seat and I think the people are telling the Dems that loud and clear.

  • arabella trefoil

    Well stated!

  • Emily

    What is brown’s record. You say to judge them by their records. Can you tell me what the highlights of his are?

  • Peggy Sue

    Good one, Amy.  I mentioned this under one of jbjd’s posts on the Amirault case because once I looked up the case and read the details, I was immediately taken back to the 80′s, a decade of absolute hysteria over Satanic cults and nursery/preschools charged with all manner of hideous sexual abuse against their charges. 

    The strange thing?  The details started sounding amazingly the same–the bizarre accusations, the lack of physical evidence and the shocking testimony of preschool children. According to the headlines, this was happening all over the country.  The cases started piling up.

    I remember the witchhunt mentality and, in fact, watched it destroy the pre-school my own kids went to. 

    It was only later, on reflection, that authorities, medical types and social workers started to step back and question the power of suggestion while interviewing small children [how kids sincerely want to agree with their questioners and often will, if the desired answer is repeated and/or suggested enough]. And the lack of credible, physical evidence.

    What I find disturbing is Martha Coakley had that time to reflect but was still unwilling to consider missteps that were made in the case.  Rather, she rigidly held to the State’s case, even though it had been largely discredited.

    And yes, many lives and livlihoods were ruined by overzealous and misguided prosecutors and social service professionals in these cases. 

    I would certainly say that this was “not” Martha Coakley’s finest moment, and the outcome for the Amirault family was justice gone wild. 

  • arabella trefoil

    You know the answer to that question. I may not agree with Brown on the issues, but as I said in a previous post, the game has changed.

    Brown must win in order to derail Obama’s healthcare plan.

  • TeakWoodKite

    The one youtube with Martha looks like she is standing outside the well of the 24 set. Where is that a bunker? (can’t play the clip with getting a rash o hoey fromthe Dembot, my beloved sanehalf)

  • TeakWoodKite

    The one youtube with Martha looks like she is standing outside the well of the 24 set. Where is that, a bunker? (can’t play the clip with getting a rash o hoey from the Dembot, my beloved sanehalf, until the night shift comes on.)

  • Emily

    Arabella, seriously not trying to be facetious. Does he have any accomplishments worth mentioning?

    I’ve noticed nq going really wild in this race. I don’t get the brown frenzy at all.

    Usually I am in agreement with Larry and rabble rouser from lgbt issues to middle east issues and always about the cretin Obama.

  • TeakWoodKite

    and Rev Amy, your articulate well written Rebble rousing is much appreciatted.

    Ya think the really is in a bunker? I mean mentally?

  • TeakWoodKite

    The one youtube with Martha looks like she is standing outside the well of the 24 set. Where is that, a bunker? (can’t play the clip without getting a rash o hoey from the Dembot, my beloved sanehalf, until the night shift comes on.)  

  • buzzlatte

    Emily, you little bot you, stop trying to agitate.  Sweetie, when your precious messiah can’t fill a 3,000 seat venue, it’s over.

    Any engagement about Brown is useless.  Go home, fix a cup of noodles, and grow up.

    Oh, and have a nice Tuesday.

  • TeakWoodKite

    and Rev Amy, your articulate well written Rebble rousing is much appreciatted. 
     
    Ya think the really is in a bunker? I mean mentally?

  • TeakWoodKite

    and Rev Amy, your articulate well written Rebble rousing is much appreciatted. 
     
    Ya think she is really is in a bunker? I mean mentally?

  • Emily

    If I lived in mass I would sit it out to help stop the health insurance bailout- if it would work. Will it work if coakley is kept out of senate. I am seeing posts that say Reid can get it through another way. I haven’t seen this issue spelled out.

  • Emily

    Rabble Rouser, are you around to help me with this? You know me by NoTrollZone (kind of ironic since I just got accused of trolling;) )

  • Ferd Berfle

    “Usually I am in agreement with Larry and rabble rouser from lgbt issues to middle east issues and always about the cretin Obama”

    When you resort to that sort of rhetorical spin, you’re reading from your obamabotcamp powerpoint presentation, toodles.

    Nice try but no cigar.

  • Peggy Sue

    Whoa, I just checked Intrade Predictions that now has:

    Coakley 30.2

    Brown    65.0

    This breakdown was a 50/50 split earlier today.

    Link here:

    http://www.intrade.com/?request_operation=main&request_type=action&checkHomePage=true 

  • buzzlatte

    Is there anything about your previous posts that would label you as a troll?  LOL!

    Rhetorical Spin?  No kidding!  

    Take heart they’re playing Whack-A-Mole with the “Emiliys” over at Politico, too!

  • oowawa

    this is the worst of the worst catastrophes in the world. Ohhhhh! It’s–it’s–it’s the flames … it’s a terrific crash, ladies and gentlemen. It’s smoke, and it’s flames now …  Oh, the humanity  . . .  Ah! It’s–it’s–it’s–it’s … o–ohhh! I–I can’t talk, ladies and gentlemen. Honest, it’s just laying there, a mass of smoking wreckage. Ah! And everybody can hardly breathe and talk, and the screaming. , I–I’m gonna have to stop for a minute because I’ve lost my voice. This is the worst thing I’ve ever witnessed.

    (account of the fate of the O-Whole-Health bill after Tuesday’s election in Mass.)

  • buzzlatte

    Didn’t I see a pic of Martha with a helmet on?

  • Ferd Berfle

    “Sitting it out” is akin to voting present and would not work. The most important issue is not the candidates themselves. To the contrary, what is of primary importance is stopping the healthcare bs from becoming law, which means simply that Martha must not be elected. It does not matter what Brown’s record is in this instance because there are other, much more important considerations upon which to base one’s vote. This is about much more than a Senate seat.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    And by all means, I recommend jbjd’s blog to everyone!

    Jackarooty, exactly.  Identity politics is what got us Obama, after all.  It just is not enough without a decent record, experience, and a desire to serve the people, not have the people serve them. 

    Coakley has already telegraphed that she doesn’t care what the majority of Americans have to say abt the Healthcare bill, much less people in MA (aren’t y’all already paying for it there?).  That, to me, disqualified her from the get-go.

  • Emily

    Hmm. One more try. I see 3 reasons a mass ex dem would sit this one out. One, to send the message to obamaco that they are getting what they deserve; two, the sense of betrayal from coakleys flip flop over to supportin heLth industry bailout; three, that keeping her out will stop hcr from passing (and as you post here) a lack of character. To me stopping hcr is most important. So I would like to know if it will accomplish that.

  • WestVirginia304

    Emily.  I will give you a chance.  Start by visiting
    http://www.brownforussenate.com/issues

    As far as people here not in total agreement with Brown, I am one.  He is against Cap and Trade for economic reasons.  I am against it because of the same reason NASA is – it increases pollution and Mountaintop removal.  It is complex, but sometimes you measure the good and the bad of each candidate and make a measured choice.  Coakley inspired us in 08 with her support for Hillary.  She lost my respect when she went mindlessly in step with every Obama initiative I did not like.  That made it personal.  I don’t want her in my U.S. Senate.

  • buzzlatte

    What do you think?

  • Ferd Berfle

    From a distance, that picture looks like a cigar being put out. That’s cool–no cigar, Martha.

  • oowawa

    What is brown’s record. You say to judge them by their records. Can you tell me what the highlights of his are?

    This is how we have been taught to deal with such requests in the post-Obama world: “Records?  Records?  We don’t got to show you no stinking records!

  • Emily

    Thank you west Virginia… And I still remember when your state knocked the piss out of Obama in your primary. I had liked coakley because she stood by Hillary right to the farce in Denver. I thought that showed some class. And then when the Obama contingent was against coakley in the primary and bill backed her and she won I thought that was cool as hell. But when talk began she was now going to back hcr it was another story. I want that damn thing stopped. I want to know if keeping her out stops the bill. At the same time I would like to feel a bit better a out who we might get in her place. Appreciate your input wv

  • Guest

    Obama will be out of office before he can really cement this in. The masses that voted him in will be disenfranchised with the lack of instantaneous change and will not stick to it when in reality this system he’s proposing will take ten to twenty years to set up fully. Yay bureaucracy. 
     
    They’ll vote a bunch of republicans in, who will take it back down, and we won’t have to worry about it anymore. 
     
    So pass or block, he won’t be able to pull this over, and there’ll likely be a jointly authored moderate bill introduced that will keep the government out of our business…That’s making a huge assumption that the courts don’t take it down first or enough democrats don’t  change their vote to block passage in the first place  

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Thank you, Jackarooty – and I meant to say I LOVE your avatar!!

  • WestVirginia304

    Guest, the problem with that hope is the Senate bill has a supermajority provision in it.  The bill can’t be changed unless the senate goes almost 70% GOP.  That provision is constitutionally questionable, but it is in there.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Hey, Emily – Sorry for the delay in responding.

    I hope WV304′s response helped, as well as Ferd’s below.  I don’t think siting it out is the answer, either.

    As for Brown’s record, he appears to be fairly moderate, pro-choice, pro health care reform, just not this reform (like the majority of the country), in the JAG corp, so knowledgeable abt military/veteran issues, off the top of my head. 

    Oh, and he doesn’t resort to dirty play and flat out lies to win a race.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    LOL – funny, oowawa!  Oh, my…

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Thanks, Peggy Sue.  And yes, it really is remarkable that Coakley would not consider, or ADMIT, that missteps had been made.  One look at the “interrogations” should have been sufficient.

    I dunno, maybe I am wildly naive, but I still believe that if one is an Attorney General, one fights for Justice, and if that means embarrassing a state employee (prosecutor) along the way, then that’s the way it is.  Far better that than for three people to have their lives ruined, a number of young people have their daycare center ripped out from under them, and the families of the Amirault’s changed forever, along with the families of the children.

  • Emily

    Hey Rabble Rouser, excellent to hear from you. I saw the dem smear crap. Typical Obama. What was with the gay adoption isn’t normal line? Did he say that and is that as bad as it gets? You say he supports civil union so that’s fairly good – especially for a repub.
    Well even for the pseudo democrats these days.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Yes, indeed, Teak!  Seems like a likely guess to me.  I can’t tell where she is, and I DID watch the video.

    :)   Well, I hope you do get to watch them later on.

    Thank you much, Teak!

  • Emily

    Heh heh. I remember we had a list of like 20 things axelrobamaco refused to show. Birth certificate, college transcripts, medical records–I loved it when we got a letter from his doctor saying he was fine while McCain produced his actual medical records. Obama truly was the etch-a-sketch candidate.

  • Guest

    Ooops, I was under the impression that was only for the “death panels” provision. Then constitional challenges may simply extend to these entirely new rules created out of whole cloth that were never meant to see the light of day…

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    You forgot ALL of his state papers and any datebooks for his 8 yrs in IL, but other than that…  :)

  • Jackarooty

    Thanks!  that’s my Jack of “Jackarooty” fame!

  • Scott Brown BIO

    In 2004, Senator Brown received the  Public Servant of the Year Award from the United Chamber of Commerce for his leadership in reforming the state’s sex offender laws and protecting the rights of victims.

    Senator Brown is a proud member of the Massachusetts National Guard, where he has served for nearly three decades and currently holds the rank of Lt. Colonel in the Judge Advocate Generals (JAG) Corps. Brown was awarded the Army Commendation Medal for meritorious service in homeland security following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. His career in public service began as selectman in Wrentham. He then went on to serve three terms as a State Representative and won his current State Senate seat in a special election in 2004. He is currently in his third Senate term.
    He voted to try Universal Healthcare (not such a good thing He can Learn)

    He voted for provision of the morning afterpill to victims of sexual assualt and tried to protect both victims and health care provider’s rights.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Here’s an interesting link that gives a fuller picture of Brown, including this: “Gay marriage, which he once wanted to put up for a referendum? “This is settled law” in Massachusetts, he said. “People have moved on.”
    Just the other day, in fact, he chatted up two lesbians at Doyle’s in Jamaica Plain. They were so wowed, they asked for a “Brown for Senate” sign.”

  • HARP

    Final PPP poll

    Scott Brown leads Martha Coakley 51-46 in our final Massachusetts Senate poll, an advantage that is within the margin of error for the poll.

  • beachnan

    Peggy Noonan wrote an article this week, stating that the one word that  can describe the current presidency/administration is disconnect.  The voters of Massachusetts have an opportunity to send a great big message to Washington this week.   Listen to the people.  Listen to your constituents or they will remove you from office.    Somehow, this administration got the idea that they had a mandate to ride roughshod over the American people.  This healthcare bill is not what we want, and not what we need at this time.  We need jobs.  Put America back to work.  Fix the economy first or else… 

  • Peggy Sue

    The numbers are startling.  And frankly I haven’t seen any numbers with Martha Coakley pulling out of the dumpster.  One of the telling details in the PPP poll are:

    Key finding: “56% of voters in the state think Brown has made a strong case for why he should be elected while just 41% say the same of Coakley. Even among Coakley’s supporters only 73% think she’s made the argument for herself, while 94% of Brown’s supporters think he has.”

    Withering for the Coakley camp!

  • Jackarooty

    Here’s the latest on the polls at RCP:

    http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2010/senate/ma/massachusetts_senate_special_election-1144.html

    I can’t wait to see them updated tomorrow!

  • Jackarooty

    Another gem for the books:
    It’s not poor Obama who should be blamed for Martha’s floundering campaign…it’s George Bush’s fault!
    The TV ads just keep on coming…blame Bush!  Blame Bush!
    Patrick Kennedy heartily endorses “Marcia Coakley”!!!
    What a d-bag.
    http://hotlineoncall.nationaljournal.com/archives/2010/01/after_obama_ral.php

  • FrenchNail

    Most likely this provision is unconstitutional and would not pass the court considerations.

  • RalphfromBoston

    HI everybody
    On the ground for Brown here in Mass. Combat is heavy in the urban areas, light in less hostle suburbs.
    I was just cruising for inspiration but had to chime in.
    VOTE for Scott Brown
    Kill the debacle heath care bill
    send the scared Dems into retreat mode,
    home to face the people they represent.
    we have had enough, even in Massachusetts !
    I’m a Union guy, and a gay guy
    neither of which are factors in this election to me
    but maybe it may entice the bots  LOL
    Mass is 50% unenrolled, which 65 % are breaking for Scott Brown
    (supposedly)
    not an election to sit out, go vote for Brown, and help screech the brakes of the speeding to disaster trainwreck that is Obama.
    I was a 2 time loser, once for Hillary, a second time for Mccain, let’s make the 3rd try a success. do it for me  :)
    Payback is a bitch, and man, they are running scared around here

  • TeakWoodKite

    “If we lose, Senator Ted Kennedy’s seat will be in the hands of someone who opposes everything he fought for,” Mitch Stewart, the director of Obama’s grassroots political group, Organizing for America, said in an “urgent” fundraising appeal yesterday. “We’ll lose a key vote for the president’s agenda in the Senate — and put all the progress we’ve made toward health reform at risk.”

    These people don’t get it. IT. IS. NOT. TEDDY. Kennedy’s. SEAT.
    Mitch Stewart bio

  • Cindy

    thank you, Rev. Amy, for all of this info.
    The Fells Acres case is just heartbreaking!
     Good riddance ( a mild way to say “go to hell”) to Martha and anyone like her who destroys innocent lives for any reason, especially political. They’re trash and need to be thrown out.

  • Ani

    I, too, was for Martha and wrote on her behalf when she was contesting the primary.  I still believe she was the best of the Dem. primary contestants (particularly since she was running against a Pelosi pick) but clearly, I am disturbed by what I have learned and seen unfold this last week and can no longer support her.  What RRRA has shared in this article and the ones Bronwyn has written are very troubling.

    Further, considering Coakley fought back the Stupak amendment, supports Gay rights and supported Hillary to the end, I am miserable to see her stand in lock step now with Obamacare and some of her other statements and actions this week have really knocked me for a loop.   For her to fall into the Party Groupthink behavior is not what we need in the Senate.  We have far too much of that crap already.

    Brown is capitalizing on a populist message and in today’s rally was using Obama’s 2008 rhetoric against him.  Truly I have no idea what he’s going to do once he gets in there either but Coakley having a fundraiser thrown by Big Insurance/Big Phrma was the last straw.

  • FranSC

    When B0 was at the same point as Scott Brown (3rd term in the state legislature) he, too, decided to run for the US Senate after his 2004 Dem Nat’l Conv speech.  Because of that exposure, he had people already telling/asking him to run for POTUS.  Anyone who would question Brown’s qualifications simply needs to know this.  And, B0 had not won any service awards that I’m aware of.   I suppose that is because he was a street/community organizer and there probably are not any awards for that kind of job.   That would surely not qualify anyone to be POTUS either, but we do have an unqualified POTUS – and are we ever paying the price.

  • annienyc

    Payback IS a bitch, and this would be a wonderful one. : ). Hell hath no fury, did Obama and Pelosi really think they were going to get away with what they did to Hillary democrats? losers. No mercy. Get to packing Obamas.

  • FranSC

    In the final days before the Nov election for Gov in NJ, Christie did not lead in the polls more than 2 points (average).  He did better than that in the actual election.  That election was complicated by 3 or 4 candidates that did register on the radar screen.

    John King (CNN) and himself from MA, said this morning he had a good friend who text him last night and said, “It’s over”.  I think King was convinced.    

  • Jon

    Thanks to Amy and Bronwyn’s Harbor for the good work in outting Martha Coakley’s record! She’s the worst type of DA, totally political. Justice be damned when it interferes with her politcial ambitions. There really should be a special place for these political hacks like her who subvert the justice system for their own politcal ends.

    Thanks to Ralph for all the hard work you’re doing to help elect Scott Brown!

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Shut up and go thank your Mom bitch.

  • TeakWoodKite

    Too bad you haven’t done shit yourself asshole.

  • beachnan

    Too bad you haven’t done shit yourself asshole.

  • Cindy

    Is that really you, Rev. Amy? Doesn’t sound like something you’d say.

  • Anonymous

    Thanks so much for the report from the ground!  We appreciate it!!

  • Anonymous

    Fran, remember Obama was only a community organizer for 3 yrs.  By his own admission, he was not a good one.  Moreover, the community he went to organized had already BEGUN to be organized around one issue, and they completed the issue themselves after Obama was gone.  So yeah – don’t think they are handing out any awards for that!

    But THANK YOU for putting this in perspective.  Wow, that is really something.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Sorry – that Guest was me…

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    That was a great article (and one I plan on doing at some point soon).  She is so right, too…

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    THIS IS NOT ME – the REAL Rabble Rouser.  We do NOT allow people to take others’ monikers, especially one of the writers. 

    So sorry, Cindy  – we’ll try and figure out who the imposter is and ban them.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Whoever you are stealing people’s monikers, that is COMPLETELY unacceptable.  You have been reported to the Administrator.

  • Cindy

    Thanks, Amy. I knew it could not be you. You are so sweet and thoughtful.
    I hope y’all can figure out how the person did it.

  • Guest

    Obamacare as a signature piece of legislation violates the Constitution’s mandates against the federal government and I’d rather see it struck down through the courts than blocked legislatively. Before the November elections would, in that case, allow Republicans to campaign on the efforts of this entire regime as an illegal power grab.

  • RalphfromBoston

    Don’t forget they are cramming this down without us knowing the details, so how do we know what’s in the bill at all ?

  • arabella trefoil

    Teddy’s seat is six feet underground being eaten by worms.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Whoever you are stealing people’s monikers, that is COMPLETELY unacceptable.  You have been reported to the Administrator.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Thanks so much for the report from the ground!  We appreciate it!!

  • Sassy

    Amy, thanks for all the effort you have put forth on this issue, as well as the disaster in Haiti.
    I had only vague recollections of the cases cited, and would never have recalled names of those involved.
    Oppositon to statements, decisions, and policy is legitimate, and does not equate to sexism.

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    Yes, the Admin is on it. 

    And thank you – what a lovely thing to say!  I was very annoyed to see someone impersonating me anyway, but to say such crude things to YOU made it that much worse!

  • Rabble Rouser Rev. Amy

    My pleasure, Sassy.  (Thanks, Jon, for your kind words!)  It is really remarkable the results of these cases on which Coakley seemed to have dug in her heels.  It really makes me question her judgment.

    And that most definitely matters…

  • Lieberal Justice is NO JUSTICE

    LIEBERAL INJUSTICE in Mass
    The worst part of all this i sthe insult added to injury that Mr. Amirault is STILL A WALKING GUILTY MAN forced to wear an electronic bracele at a cost to him of $500/month.
    IS this Martha Coakley’s America? Is this how we treated an INNOCENT man that already suffered so much? His life and family were stolen from him for almost 20 yrs and he still has a reminder everyday on his ankle.
    Martha and Lieberals in the Justice System MAKE THINGS RIGHT WITH THIS MAN AND HIS FAMILY. You are not GOD!!

  • Barry Scott

    Martha Coakley made us all unsafe as Attorney General. She needs to be fired after she loses this senate race! Learn more about her now!

    http://mysite.verizon.net/freebarryscott/provincetown.html

  • PA Caucasian

    I was going back and forth with a commenter last Friday about the Geoghan case, and was told in no uncertain terms that I wasn’t allowed to comment on anything that happens in Massachusett(e)s because I’m from PA.

    So even though you lived in Boston for awhile, in the mind of some contributors, you may not have passed the Residency Means Test.

    Just sayin’

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